Entertainment journalism

August 28, 2007

The Brit­ney Spears Allure story has attrac­ted a fair bit of atten­tion but I was slightly gobsmacked to see this admis­sion in one com­ment piece:

Brit­ney, pop star and mother-of-the-year can­did­ate, appar­ently agreed to pose for the cover of Allure and to sit for an inter­view with writer Judith Newman.

For four days New­man chased the pop prin­cess around Los Angeles. On the first day New­man was in a cab on the way to an inter­view loc­a­tion when a last-minute call from Spears’ pub­li­cist post­poned the inter­view and re-scheduled it for the next day.

The next day Spears ditched New­man again. And so it went for the frus­trated writer. She never did get the cover inter­view and had to fake her way through a long piece on how she didn’t get the interview.

I’ve been there. I once had to fake a story on super­model Cindy Craw­ford after her obnox­ious pub­li­cist ended our inter­view three minutes after we started.

These fake stor­ies can be fun to write, par­tic­u­larly if you are allowed to vent your hos­til­ity toward the inter­view sub­ject, and the Allure writer did an excep­tional job. Her prose wasn’t nearly as angry as mine would have been after four days of try­ing to nail down the elu­sive and incon­sid­er­ate Britney.

Check out the last two paras…

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